First ticket logged on this issue but I expect many more to come. This is particularly egregious with markings covering brick pavers. There's plenty of this marking all over Clematis street and in other very heavily trafficed areas of our downtown. I know that some of this has been Discussed in the past but what do we need to do to get these markings removed and prevent them as much as possible in the future?

This looks like something from George Orwell's book "1984". What happens inside here? Waterboarding? Psychological torture? What sorts of nefarious activities are going on inside this impenetrable concrete bunker?

In all seriousness, this sort of architecture, which I believe is known as "Brutalism", has NO PLACE in a walkable city.

Former Mayor Nancy Graham sold tickets in order to implode the blighted hotel that sat on what is now the Meyer Amphitheater....search it.

This afternoon an under skilled driver turned the wrong direction on olive (south) on the one way street trying to make a right from clematis. After being honked at he stopped, put the car into reverse and rear ended a police car that was behind him and also began honking at him. The police got out of the car, spoke to the under skilled driver for 10 seconds, got back in the police car, parked and went to lunch. They did not bother checking to see if the driver had a license, was using alcohol or drugs, nor checking for warrants or insurance. Unacceptable. Keep these drivers out of our backyard.

We opened a ticket on this issue back in January and it still has not been resolved. I'm logging this new ticket with a thumbnail image so more people see it and vote it up.

Just last week, I reported a fist fight on the sidewalk at Tin Fish to the DDA security team. The situation with vagrants and drug addicts hanging around here has gotten bad. Poorly lit public spaces invite vagrants and criminal behavior!

We invested a tremendous amount of money to make better and spur economic development. It's also probably the most important public space in the City of WPB.
We must do better at maintaining what we've got.